A nice trick for very young children to learn to add nine is to add ten to the digit and to count back one. Since we are adding 1 to the ten's digit and subtracting one from the unit's digit, the sum of the digits should remain the same. For example 9+2=11 with 1+1=2. When adding 9 to itself, we would thus expect the sum of the digits to be 9 as follows: 9+9=18 (1+8=9) and 9+9+9=27 (2+7=9). Let us look at a simple multiplication: 5x7=35 (3+5=8). Now consider (7+9)x5=16x5=80 (8+0=8) or 7x(9+5)=7x14=98 (9+8=17 1+7=8).

Any positive integer can be written as 9 x n + a where 'a' is a single digit 0 to 8 and 'n' is any positive integer. Thus, using the distributive rule (9 x n + a)x(9 x m + b)= 9 x 9 x n x m + 9 x(am+bn) +ab. Since the first two factors are multiplied by 9, their sums will end up being 9 or 0, leaving us with 'ab'. In our example, 'a' was 7 and 'b' was 5. We would expect in any base system the number before that base would behave just like the nine.

Further down the page -The method bears striking resemblance to standard signal processing and computational error detection and error correction methods, typically using similar modular arithmetic.

A nice trick for very young children to learn to add nine is to add ten to the digit and to count back one. Since we are adding 1 to the ten's digit and subtracting one from the unit's digit, the sum of the digits should remain the same. For example 9+2=11 with 1+1=2. When adding 9 to itself, we would thus expect the sum of the digits to be 9 as follows: 9+9=18 (1+8=9) and 9+9+9=27 (2+7=9). Let us look at a simple multiplication: 5x7=35 (3+5=8). Now consider (7+9)x5=16x5=80 (8+0=8) or 7x(9+5)=7x14=98 (9+8=17 1+7=8).

Any positive integer can be written as 9 x n + a where 'a' is a single digit 0 to 8 and 'n' is any positive integer. Thus, using the distributive rule (9 x n + a)x(9 x m + b)= 9 x 9 x n x m + 9 x(am+bn) +ab. Since the first two factors are multiplied by 9, their sums will end up being 9 or 0, leaving us with 'ab'. In our example, 'a' was 7 and 'b' was 5. We would expect in any base system the number before that base would behave just like the nine.

Further down the page -The method bears striking resemblance to standard signal processing and computational error detection and error correction methods, typically using similar modular arithmetic.

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

"To pee or not to pee, that is the question!" - Old Toad Proverb

“Unbeknownst to most, Kindness is not a STD, so pass it on!” – Old Toad Proverb

"And though I believe in the ineffable glory of God, and though I might have experienced the undeniable reality of the Deity, and though I may know the secrets of the ages, these do not fulfill the Love in my heart. But to Change and Be and Do and dissolve both the subject of my person and the object of my God into the fluency of Empirical Providence.The Way, the Truth, and the Life."

numbers have these anamolies because there is fundamentally no such thing as a number, but rather a single geometric placeholder for quantifiable relationships.

We only separate numbers into distinct units in order to make that geometric placeholder tractable.

Thing of the geometric placeholder as a the "rotating ball" of an electric typewriter.

A letter is "rolled" into position at the command of the event (the typists selection). But there are no distinct letters on the ball: just a specialized embossing made distinct by the impact that raised embossing makes through the ribbon on to the paper.

numbers have these anamolies because there is fundamentally no such thing as a number, but rather a single geometric placeholder for quantifiable relationships.

We only separate numbers into distinct units in order to make that geometric placeholder tractable.

Thing of the geometric placeholder as a the "rotating ball" of an electric typewriter.

A letter is "rolled" into position at the command of the event (the typists selection). But there are no distinct letters on the ball: just a specialized embossing made distinct by the impact that raised embossing makes through the ribbon on to the paper.

Our reality is that paper.

Quoting: Anonymous Coward 862437

True. But then don't you think that our whole mathematical thinking and system is flawed? To say there are 'irrational' numbers is only an cover up to our lack of ability to properly quantify that idea/number.

My biggest annoyance is PI. How in the world can you set up a whole mathematical system that can't even reconcile the circumference of a circle?

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Quoting: Butt Ugly Toad

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .

numbers have these anamolies because there is fundamentally no such thing as a number, but rather a single geometric placeholder for quantifiable relationships.

We only separate numbers into distinct units in order to make that geometric placeholder tractable.

Thing of the geometric placeholder as a the "rotating ball" of an electric typewriter.

A letter is "rolled" into position at the command of the event (the typists selection). But there are no distinct letters on the ball: just a specialized embossing made distinct by the impact that raised embossing makes through the ribbon on to the paper.

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .

Now guess why they want to depopulate it. :)

To create Mathematical Harmony!

Ribbit

They obviously don't want to let it reach 7 billion mark. :)

Quoting: Anonymous Coward 871439

The earth would blow apart!

Ribbit ;)

"To pee or not to pee, that is the question!" - Old Toad Proverb

“Unbeknownst to most, Kindness is not a STD, so pass it on!” – Old Toad Proverb

No one has answered that as of today. Is there anyone capable of answering it on this planet?

Ribbit

Quoting: Butt Ugly Toad

Why would I want to use simple whole numbers and be left with .x scale when this 830/747 will generate a x.x scale of 1.1. Count with more than single digit numbers, just primes or learn to count with only one number it will change the way you see most numbers functioning.

9 is a hyper number but it loses out to 12 and 7 and most other prime combinations. Derivatives of 3 are good for baseline, scalars, and grids, considering the only other number as consistently accurate would be a 0 or 5 since they are always creating a very simplistic wave pattern.

The reason is because of the Dimensions of Numbers, which is nothing more than how Numbers work with other numbers. One thing you didn't notice is 7 is a Prime Number, so try dividing using other Prime Numbers and notice what happens with them, which then you will start gaining knowledge of Dimensional Math and from there, you might be able to figure out the Answer to your own Question. ;)

Ribbit :)

Yes, 7 is the prime number for planet number 7 with almost 7 billion people on board .